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    Restaurant in Kyoto, Japan

    MASHIRO

    795Pearl Points

    Michelin counter dining, lunch under ¥15,000.

    MASHIRO, Restaurant in Kyoto

    About MASHIRO

    A Michelin-starred, 11-seat counter in Nakagyo Ward where French technique meets Japanese seasonal produce. MASHIRO earned its Tabelog 2026 Bronze and Top 100 recognition quickly after opening in 2023. Dinner runs JPY 20,000–39,999 all-in; lunch is the smarter entry point. Book well in advance — this one fills fast.

    Pearl Verdict

    MASHIRO is one of the most compelling arguments for booking a counter seat in Kyoto right now. A Michelin star earned in 2024, a Tabelog score of 4.11, and inclusion in both the Tabelog Award 2026 Bronze and the Tabelog Innovative/Creative Cuisine Top 100 for 2025 confirm what the reservations waitlist already suggests: this 11-seat counter in Nakagyo Ward is genuinely hard to get into, and worth the effort. Dinner runs JPY 20,000–29,999 per head (with actual spend reported closer to JPY 30,000–39,999 once wine and service are factored in); lunch is the value entry point at JPY 10,000–14,999. If you are in Kyoto for a special occasion and want something that sits outside the kaiseki tradition without abandoning Japanese rigour, book MASHIRO ahead of your trip.

    About MASHIRO

    Imagine arriving at a second-floor room in the OHG Kyoto Rokkaku Building, just four minutes from Karasuma Oike Station, and finding eleven counter seats arranged around a kitchen that treats French technique as a starting point rather than a destination. That is the proposition at MASHIRO: a genre-less contemporary restaurant, opened in August 2023, where the cuisine draws on French foundations and pulls freely from Japanese ingredients and culinary instincts. Chef Hiroyuki Koshimo, who previously worked in Ashiya and Gion, chose the name deliberately. His previous restaurant, Roiro, meant "black as lacquer"; MASHIRO means "pure white," signalling a clean reset and a broader expressive range. The room, described as stylish and spacious for its format, is entirely non-smoking and wheelchair accessible, with counter seating as the only configuration.

    The seasonal angle matters here more than at most restaurants in its price bracket. MASHIRO's kitchen has a declared focus on fish, and the menus rotate with the seasons. One dish that has built a following among reviewers is the risotto prepared with Yosano rice, a seasonal fixture that draws on the Kyoto region's rice-growing heritage and illustrates how the kitchen incorporates Japanese produce into what is ostensibly a European framework. Because the restaurant has been open since August 2023 and has already accumulated two Tabelog award cycles' worth of recognition, the cooking has clearly found a consistent identity quickly. That said, the specific menu you encounter will depend heavily on when you visit: the fish focus means spring and autumn, when Japanese coastal waters are at their most productive, are likely to deliver the widest range of options. If you are planning around a particular season, contact the restaurant in advance to understand what the kitchen is working with.

    The temporal rhythm of MASHIRO's service is worth knowing before you book. Lunch and dinner seatings begin simultaneously, not in waves, which means the room fills at once and the experience is paced as a group. Both lunch and dinner are counter-format course meals. There are no à la carte options implied by the structure, and given the 11-seat capacity and the popularity the awards have generated, the restaurant operates more like a reservation-mandatory omakase venue than a walk-in contemporary bistro. The sommelier-led wine program, described as a particular focus of the house, adds to the cost if you engage it fully, which partly explains the gap between the listed dinner price of JPY 20,000–29,999 and the review-based average of JPY 30,000–39,999.

    For a special occasion in Kyoto, MASHIRO sits in a specific and useful position. It is not kaiseki, so you are not committing to the full formal ritual of Gion Sasaki or Kyokaiseki Kichisen. It is not a Western restaurant transplanted to Japan, so you are not missing the point of eating in Kyoto. What you get is a Michelin-starred kitchen using French precision to frame Japanese seasonal produce, served across an intimate counter where the format itself is part of the experience. The smart casual dress code and the birthday plate / celebration service option confirm that the room is calibrated for exactly this kind of occasion. Children under 10 are not admitted, which reinforces the adult-evening framing.

    Getting there is direct by Kyoto standards. Four minutes on foot from Exit 5 of Karasuma Oike Station on the Kyoto Municipal Subway, or four minutes from Exit 21 of Karasuma Station on the Hankyu Railway Kyoto Main Line. From JR Kyoto Station, allow around 10 minutes by taxi. There is no parking at the venue, though nearby options exist. Credit cards are accepted; electronic money and QR code payments are not. A 10% service charge applies. The full address is 234 OHG Kyoto Rokkaku Building 2F, Donomaecho, Nakagyo Ward, Kyoto.

    If you are building a Kyoto dining itinerary and want to triangulate, MASHIRO pairs well with a more traditional kaiseki dinner elsewhere in the trip. For contemporary cooking in the same register but with an Italian lens, COPPIE is worth comparing. For another French-influenced counter in the city, shiro and middle are both in the conversation. Fans of ingredient-driven seasonal cooking in Japan should also consider Raiz and TOKI as alternatives at different price points. Wider afield, HAJIME in Osaka, akordu in Nara, and Goh in Fukuoka represent similar contemporary-Japanese ambitions at comparable or higher price levels. For a global comparison of the counter-format contemporary genre, Jungsik in Seoul and César in New York City offer useful reference points, as do Harutaka in Tokyo, 1000 in Yokohama, and 6 in Okinawa.

    See our full Kyoto restaurants guide, Kyoto hotels guide, Kyoto bars guide, Kyoto wineries guide, and Kyoto experiences guide for broader trip planning.

    Know Before You Go

    • Price (dinner): JPY 20,000–29,999 listed; actual spend typically JPY 30,000–39,999 with wine
    • Price (lunch): JPY 10,000–14,999 listed; actual spend typically JPY 15,000–19,999
    • Service charge: 10% added to the bill
    • Seats: 11 counter seats only; no private rooms
    • Private hire: Available for up to 20 people
    • Hours: Lunch from 12:00; dinner from 18:00; both seatings begin simultaneously. Closed Wednesdays and some Tuesdays.
    • Reservations: Required; booking difficulty is high — reserve well in advance
    • Getting there: 4-minute walk from Karasuma Oike Station (Exit 5) or Karasuma Station on Hankyu (Exit 21); 10 minutes by taxi from JR Kyoto Station
    • Payment: Credit cards accepted; no electronic money or QR code payments
    • Dress code: Smart casual
    • Children: Age 10 and above only
    • Parking: Not available on-site; nearby options exist
    • Occasions: Birthday plates and celebration service available; sommelier on hand

    Recognition

    • Michelin 1 Star (2024)
    • Tabelog Award 2026 Bronze
    • Tabelog Innovative/Creative Cuisine Top 100, 2025
    • Tabelog score: 4.11

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can I eat at the bar at MASHIRO?

    Yes, and it is the only option. MASHIRO operates an exclusively counter-format room of 11 seats, so every diner sits at the bar regardless of party size. There are no private rooms. If counter dining is not your format, this is not the right venue — but for the format, a Michelin star and a Tabelog score of 4.11 suggest it is being executed at a high level.

    What should I wear to MASHIRO?

    The venue specifies smart casual, and at dinner prices of ¥20,000–¥29,999 per person (plus a 10% service charge), the room skews dressed up rather than down. Think neat trousers and a clean shirt or equivalent — avoid overly casual or beachwear attire. Kyoto's contemporary fine dining scene generally expects a step above weekend-casual.

    Can MASHIRO accommodate groups?

    Groups up to 20 can book the space for private use, which is the only way to seat more than the standard 11-counter configuration. For parties smaller than 11, you book counter seats as normal. There are no private rooms within the regular service layout, so large groups cannot be accommodated during standard seatings — check the venue's official channels via mashiro-kyoto.com to arrange exclusive use.

    Is MASHIRO good for solo dining?

    It is one of the stronger solo options in Kyoto's fine dining tier. Every seat is at an 11-seat counter, so solo diners are a natural fit rather than an afterthought. The lunch format, priced at ¥10,000–¥14,999, makes a solo visit considerably easier to justify than dinner at ¥20,000–¥29,999 — with review-based averages running somewhat higher than listed prices, budget accordingly.

    What should I order at MASHIRO?

    MASHIRO runs a set course format — you do not order à la carte. The kitchen is described as genre-less, drawing on French technique with Japanese influence and a noted focus on fish. Yosano rice risotto is flagged as a perennial favourite in available descriptions. At both lunch and dinner, service starts simultaneously for all guests, so arriving on time is not optional.

    Location

    Japan, 〒604-8134 Kyoto, Nakagyo Ward, Donomaecho, 234 OHG京都六角ビル 2階

    Kyoto, Japan

    Compare MASHIRO

    How Easy to Book: MASHIRO vs. Peers
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    MASHIROContemporary¥¥¥Hard
    Gion SasakiKaiseki, Japanese¥¥¥¥Unknown
    cenciItalian¥¥¥Unknown
    IfukiKaiseki¥¥¥¥Unknown
    Kyokaiseki KichisenJapanese¥¥¥¥Unknown
    SENFrench, Japanese¥¥¥¥Unknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Also Consider

    MASHIRO sits at the ¥¥¥ price point in a Kyoto dining scene where most of its award-winning competition charges ¥¥¥¥. That gap is the clearest reason to choose it for a special occasion where you want Michelin-level cooking without the outlay of Gion Sasaki or Kyokaiseki Kichisen. Both of those are kaiseki institutions with longer track records and deeper ceremony; if the kaiseki format is what you want, they are the right choice. But if you are looking for something more genre-fluid — French-rooted, seasonally Japanese, and served at a counter rather than in tatami formality — MASHIRO is a better fit and meaningfully cheaper per head.

    Ifuki is another ¥¥¥¥ kaiseki option that prioritises traditional rigour over innovation. cenci at ¥¥¥ is the closest alternative in price tier: Italian-influenced, also Michelin-recognised, and similarly intimate in format. Between MASHIRO and cenci, the choice is French-meets-Japanese versus Italian-meets-Japanese. Both are worth booking; neither is significantly easier to get into. SEN at ¥¥¥¥ combines French and Japanese influences at a higher price point and may offer a slightly more polished service environment, but MASHIRO's Tabelog score of 4.11 and its rapid accumulation of awards suggest the cooking quality is not far behind.

    For booking difficulty, all five comparison venues require advance reservations, but MASHIRO's 11-seat counter means availability is especially constrained. If you are choosing between these restaurants on ease of booking alone, cenci is the best starting point. If you are choosing on value, MASHIRO delivers the most per yen at its price tier. If tradition and ceremony are your priority over innovation, Gion Sasaki or Kyokaiseki Kichisen are the appropriate benchmark.

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